Correct, inartfully expressed on my part. Win or lose against the Warriors, if we are to advance in the tournament our next two games will both be against teams that have already gone 2-0 against us, and if we don't beat the Warriors but still get in, the second of those two games will be on the road in an arena where we have already lost two games this year (and have looked bad doing it).
And that's just quirky, because we've only played 15 games this year. For 6 of those to have been against upcoming tournament opponents and for us to be 0-6 in those games...setting ourselves up for a storyline, I guess:
"With the Minnesota Timberwolves losing earlier in the evening, the Kings had no backdoor into the Tournament. They would need to defeat the Golden State Warriors - one of their two rival teams - despite holding an 0-2 record against them in the short season. In their previous matchup the Kings had been defeated, also on their home floor, by a buzzer-beating Klay Thompson jumper. This time, however, the Kings prevailed handily and as the 2-seed were already destined to meet either Houston or New Orleans in the quarterfinals - against both of whom they were also 0-2, those six combined losses against the Warriors, Rockets, and Pelicans being their only losses on the season to that point. By the time the Kings went to the locker room for halftime in their final round-robin game, they knew that were they to advance they would host the Rockets, whose two victories over Sacramento earlier in the season had come by a combined 43 points. With the Kings as the 2-seed, however, the game would be hosted in Sacramento, and the Kings made use of a new high horns set to counteract the tendencies of the Houston centers to drop into the paint, leading to an easy win. The semifinals moved to Las Vegas, where the Kings faced their other rival team, the Los Angeles Lakers, who had narrowly defeated the Phoenix Suns in their quarterfinal in L.A. before making the quick drive up the 15 freeway to Vegas with a host of fans trailing them, bringing along a heavy home court advantage. It didn't matter. The Kings, who had run the older Lakers into the ground in their first matchup of the season ran the game on repeat and advanced to the Finals to face the only team fate would allow them to face - the Indiana Pacers. The two teams were inextricably linked by a blockbuster star-for-star trade executed at the trade deadline in 2022, when the Kings sent budding second-year guard Tyrese Haliburton to the Pacers for the 25-year-old two-time all-star center Domantas Sabonis. Initial reactions to the trade were universally negative towards the Kings, but in the upcoming '22-'23 season newly-hired coach Mike Brown used Sabonis' skills at running an offense out of the post to unlock the lightning speed of De'Aaron Fox, and in their first full season after the trade, the Kings cruised to the best team offensive rating in league history and a #3 spot in the playoffs, breaking a league-record 15-year playoff drought. This year, however, the Kings had begun to work on their defense and had ceded the top offensive spot in the league to those same Indiana Pacers, fronted by Haliburton in a now undisputed lead guard role and his league-pacing 12 assists per game. A mere season and a half after making the biggest win-win trade in league memory, the two squads were set to face off in the very first In Season Tournament Finals..."